Devan Shimoyama & Mary Sibande in TEXTURES: The KSU Museum, Kent, Ohio
EXHIBITION CONCEPTION
TEXTURES: the history and art of Black hair offers new perspectives on Black hair featuring over 50 named artists, 180 objects and encompassing visual culture, material artifacts, and fine art from ancient Egypt to today. The co-curators, Dr. Tameka Ellington and Dr. Joseph Underwood, collaborated for four years, expanding on their individual research and connecting to reassess the complex social, historic, and very personal feelings around Black hair. Dr. Ellington has been researching the phenomena of Black hair since 2002 and Dr. Underwood’s research focuses on artists from the African continent and the Diaspora, focusing on the mid-to-late twentieth century to today. Together, they have assembled objects to provoke memories, generate conversations, and engage new ways of thinking about this simple, but powerful element: hair. Dr. Ellington observed, “The issues that Black people have had with their hair is more than 400 years old, and society is just now catching up. I do not say that to be harsh, but it is important for me to help others come to the realization that as long as there has been racism, there has been hair discrimination.”
THE DIGITAL GREENBOOK
Explore the Digital Green Book, conceived in tandem with TEXTURES and inspired by Victor Green’s Green Book, this project documents the modern-day landscape of Black hair care in Northeast Ohio.
CATALOGUE
TEXTURES: THE HISTORY AND ART OF BLACK HAIR
The book synthesizes research in history, fashion, art and visual culture to reassess the hair story of peoples of African descent. Long a fraught topic for African Americans and others in the diaspora, Black hair is here addressed by artists, barbers and activists in both its historical perceptions and its ramifications for self and society today.